Algeria, Armenia, Bahamas, Bolivia, Cayman Islands, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Honduras, Jordan, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Mongolia, Morocco, Namibia, Panama, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Syria, Trinidad & Tobago, Uruguay…many of these programs don’t exist on the wide-scale but rather will occasionally just have a gymnast who trains from another country come and compete, or maybe they’re home-grown and home-trained but they’re just incredibly talented and reach a high level despite not having access to the resources top programs have. Some do have systems internally, but they’re VERY small and usually don’t have gymnasts who would be stronger than maybe L7-L8 in the U.S. The Cayman Islands, Qatar, and Namibia, for instance…they both attract lots of local gymnasts at the lower/rec levels and don’t really have true “elites” but they often send gymnasts to major world-level events who aren’t doing difficult enough skills to get above a 1-1.5 D score, max. I love and respect these programs so much, though…they might not have top-level girls but they still consistently send gymnasts to major events to give them that experience and to inspire younger generations to get into the sport. Jana El Keky was quite a hero for the dozens of young girls who came to watch her compete in Doha.